Musings on the Most Ridiculous Band I Can't Stop Listening To

Tag: Little Aleppo (Page 20 of 20)

The Bookstore With No Title

There’s a bookstore in Little Aleppo with no title: it’s just The Bookstore, but that’s not its name, so it’s just the bookstore. It’s been there for a while. Across the street in the House of Inappropriate Trousers, Creepy Ernie says it was here when he took over his shop from the former owner, About-To Be-Murdered-For-His-Shop Dwayne. (There’s a sale this week: 10% off everything in the store, 20% if you’re willing to let Ernie whack you in the nipples with a snorkel.) Sheila, who owns Big-Dicked Sheila’s Hair Salon for Rock Stars and Their Ilk right down the street, swears that the bookstore used to be around the corner on Good Jones Street.

All the men drinking at dawn in the Morning Tavern had their own theories about the bookstore; all the women had two, because women have to work twice as hard. It was best not to ask about the place: you’d be there forever; everyone in the joint were self-taught polymaths in between ideas, or poetic stevedores, or playwrights who liked stabbing people. Inquiring about the bookstore at C.C.H. Pounder’s Head Coverings for Those who can Leave their Foolishness at the Door will get you admonished. For foolishness.

The windows were large, big bays on either side of the door, but piles of books and shelving and some haphazard curtains blocked out most of the sun, and the door was set back a few feet, scuffed and black with nine glass panes on the top half, and a brass knob with an actual latch like a proper door. There was a little bell that went tinkadink when you came in, and the front of the shop was an open space with two tables overflowing with books in no particular order on the right, and a desk on a small stage to the left.

One assumed it was a desk. There was a lamp poking out from the stacks of hardcovers, softcovers, pads, bills, newspapers, folders, and half-eaten sandwiches; occasionally, a phone could be heard ringing from under the mound of papers. Plus, there was a man in a suit sitting at it with his feet up, and that is a very strong clue that the piece of furniture in question is a desk.

“Why the desk was invented, you see,” Mr. Venable would explain occasionally to customers. “The chair was already in use, but when men in suits sat in them, they had nowhere to prop their feet up. These men also required a flat surface for coffee, and hidey-holes for weapons and pornography. Voila: the desk.”

Mr. Venable owned one black suit, or perhaps many black suits that were the same black suit. He did for certain only own one black tie, and he kept that in the bottom drawer of his desk and put it on for funerals, but otherwise he left the collar of his dark red shirt open. One day, a customer asked why he wore a suit every day

“It’s a business,” Mr. Venable said.

The customer agreed, but mentioned that most business-owners were dressing more casual these days.

“Fuck ’em,” Mr. Venable said.

The shop continued past the tables and Mr. Venable’s platform:  two tall double-sided shelves that made three aisles, and the outer walls were row after row of books, too. Beyond the aisles, there was a dogleg to the left and more books, and there was an alcove off that, and up the ladder on your right was the attic, which had more books and several people had never returned from.

The problem with owning a semi-fictional bookstore, Mr. Venable had come to understand, was that–in any universe with even the slightest amount of magic in it–it was a terrible idea to put too many books in the same location. They tried to open a public library in Cahokia, off Route 77, and the place was infinite within days. Mr. Venable knew logically that the books were not humping, and he had never caught any of them in the act, but he was sure that he could hear them at it when it was quiet. It sounded like paper being wadded up, rhythmically.

And it was just books: no coffee, records, toys, magazines, calendars, espresso makers, tote bags, or hand puppets. Just endless miles of books, ten feet in a row of them at a time, and with others stacked on top of them. The place was a browser’s paradise, mostly because Mr. Venable has his own idiosyncratic categorization system.

There was no Fiction, or YA, or Travel. Instead there was Author’s Name Is Murray; and Books About Death (Directly); and Books About Death (Indirectly); and Clearly Made-Up Non-Fiction; and Poetry By Tall Women. There was Cranky White Guy Travelogues, and Mr. Venable put that right next to Overly Long Sci-Fi; within a few days, he was happily reading Paul Theroux bitching about the hyper-railroads on Felicidae IV, Throneworld to the Felis Empire.

Once you found what you were looking for, though, you could really find what you were looking for: Mr. Venable’s sub-sectioning was precise. After you’d found the Horror section, then you could look through the Vampire sub-section, which was broken into Sexy Vampires, Scary Vampires, Tough Urban Vampires, Christian Vampires, and Irish Vampires. (Which is split into further sub-strata: Irish Vampires Who Are Not Bono and Irish Vampires Who Are Bono.)

You could walk around for hours looking for something specific; most people who tried gave up and bought the book they really came in for. Precarious Lee shopped there regularly and had never even attempted to find something particular. He looked for the shop cat, who also did not have a name, and bought the book it was sitting on. What’s the use of going to a magic bookstore if you’re not going to get all hoodoo about it, Precarious figured.

Mr. Venable did not care for cats, or about them; the cat seemed to feel the same way about him. They never squabbled. A bookstore needs an owner, and a bookstore needs a cat, just like a nighborhood–Little Aleppo, in this case–needs a bookstore.

Chateau du’Chapeau

The true Enthusiast is a loyal customer, and believes in supporting the small business, even if that business is run by a leering pervert (Creepy Ernie’s House of Unacceptable Trousers;) a raging maniac with access to an alternate dimension of instruments (Hateful Ed’s Guitar Center of Misfit Toys;) or a well-hung stylist who, through no fault of her own, made you feel weird about your sexuality for a few days (Big-Dicked Sheila’s Hair Salon for Rock Stars and Their Ilk.)

Luckily, all the stores are located in the same shopping center right in the heart of the city’s newest up-and-coming neighborhood, Little Aleppo, which hasn’t had a cholera outbreak in weeks. (If you round up liberally.)

Getting there is half the fun (but almost 90% of the danger) as no public transport goes to the area after the residents kept hijacking buses and jousting with them. An Uber request for a ride to Foreign Bathroom Square (the heart of Little Aleppo, named after losing Civil War colonel Foreign Bathroom Lee) results in the app deleting itself from your phone. The subways also neglect the area, as the station filled with C.H.U.D.s the moment it was opened.

Walking is your best bet, but wear your sturdiest shoes, which will almost certainly be stolen once (if) you arrive. Right upfront: the route involves crossing elevated freeways on foot. You also need to scamper up and down a few embankments, some of which are protected by Hobo Kings. You will have to solve their riddles.

Once in the general location, it’s straight down Skid Row for two miles. Left on Lonely Street. Right on the Avenue of No Children. Duck through Crime Alley. At some point, you will hear glass bottles being clinked together and an invitation to come and play: do not accept this offer, as there is a devious, denim-vested intent underlying it.

And there you are, at the oldest and most respected of Little Aleppo’s shops: C.C.H. Pounder’s Headcoverings for Customers Willing to Leave their Foolishness at the Door. In her shop, Ms. Pounder was in charge: she was the judge, the chief of police, the head physician. A lot of the time, she was the boss of a secret government agency. She also did the books, the ordering, and the window design.

If you were respectful, well-mannered, and above-board in your business dealings, C.C.H. Pounder could put just about anything on your head: baseball cap; beanie; beanie with propellor beanie with outboard motor; motorcycle helmet; bicycle helmet; unicycle helmet (same as a bicycle helmet, but with no chance of getting laid;) bandana, knot in back like biker or gang member from an 80’s action flick; bandana, knot in the front like black lady from South or gay Puerto Rican guy from the Bronx; bandana with the knots in each corner, dunked in the sea at Blackpool, set atop head.

There were yarmulkes, kufis, mitres, wimples, zucchettos, executioner’s cloaks, wedding veils, hard hats, sheitels, war bonnets, surgical masks, dunce caps, army helmet, marching band shakos. Any head covering that symbolized duty, or the discourse of power, or the coming of the end. Any hat someone didn’t want to put on. There were also those football helmets with cup holders on the side for beer and flexi-straws so you could just sip your bye-bye juice like a giant failure-baby; I think we’ll all agree that if there were such a thing as “opposites” in hats, then the beer-hat and the executioner’s cloak are it.*

She has hats no white people could ever wear to a party without getting in trouble: sombreros, turbans, rasta-dude caps. There were also hats that only white people could pull off, such as the deerstalker, the coonskin cap, and the pith helmet. C.C.H. Pounder will not point out that the white-guy hats are all inextricably linked to violence and colonialism: she is here today for the purposes of commerce, not foolishness.

Fedoras could be purchased, though C.C.H. Pounder would attempt to talk the fellow (it was always a fellow) out of it. Even if you do have the genetic structure for a fedora,** they look ridiculous if you’re the only one wearing them. men looked cool in the old pictures because all of them were wearing hats. By themselves, fedoras are silly and make you look like a dick with a tiny head, but if everyone’s wearing one, then there’s herd immunity.

You could get the headbands that the Dead so often donned, Phil and Mickey especially. There were so many different kinds of headband to choose from. You had your classic stretchy terrycloth, but it turned out that their luxurious thickness was a strike against them: the ‘bands would block the sun out and leave huge pale roads across your forehead. A fox told Phil his forehead looked like “a television that lost its vertical hold.”

* It might be unfair to put the hard hat in there with those others: the hard hat is a positive thing. Sure, if you wear one, then you don’t look forward to putting it on in the morning, but it’s better than the old system, which was dying.

** Jon Hamm and Danny DeVito can wear the fuck out fedoras. You have to be perfectly rectangular or round to make a fedora† look good.

† First person to say “trilby” in the comments gets banned for life. They’re fedoras. (Possibly fedorae.)

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